---
title: "Tether’s USDT Locked Out of EU Exchanges as MiCA Deadline Hits"
date: 2026-07-01
author: "Kathleen Kinder"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/tether-usdt-locked-out-of-eu-region-after-mica.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Cryptocurrency"
    url: "/crypto.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# Tether’s USDT Locked Out of EU Exchanges as MiCA Deadline Hits

On July 1, 2026, the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation hit its final transition deadline, and licensed exchanges are pulling Tether’s USDT from their platforms.

## Key Takeaways

- MiCA’s transition period closed on July 1, 2026, and Tether never applied for the e-money-token authorization MiCA requires.
- That decision now locks its roughly $185 billion USDT out of licensed European exchanges.
- Circle is the only top-10 stablecoin issuer that secured MiCA compliance for both USDC and its euro-denominated EURC.
- A day before the deadline, BNY named USDC the first stablecoin on its Digital Asset Custody platform.
- Of roughly 1,200 pre-MiCA-registered virtual-asset firms EU-wide, only about 210 converted to full CASP authorization, a 17% conversion rate.

## What Happened?

MiCA requires any e-money token circulating in the EU to be issued under an authorized electronic-money-institution license, with **60%** of EMT reserves held in European bank deposits. Tether’s non-application was not a one-day decision but a multi-year standoff with that reserve rule. The **July 1** deadline is the finish line of a staggered exit rather than a single cutoff, following months of exchanges narrowing USDT access for EU users ahead of the transition period’s close.

Circle, by contrast, [secured MiCA compliance](https://coinlaw.io/stablecoins-regulations-under-mica-statistics/) for both USDC and EURC, making it the only issuer among the top ten stablecoins by market cap to clear that bar. The company built toward this deadline for years, licensing an **electronic money institution (EMI)** in France that passports across all **27** EU member states, the same regulatory route MiCA was designed to reward.

Tether CEO **Paolo Ardoino** has publicly defended the company’s stance, arguing that MiCA’s requirement to hold 60% of EMT reserves in European bank deposits introduces its own risk. Tether’s reserve backing leans heavily on U.S. Treasury holdings rather than eurozone bank deposits, a structural mismatch that made compliance a much heavier lift than a licensing paperwork problem.

> Tether’s $186B USDT Faces EU Ban Today As MiCA Kicks In  
>   
> Coinbase, Kraken and Crypto(.)com EU have already restricted [$USDT](https://x.com/search?q=%24USDT&src=ctag&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) ahead of the July 1 MiCA deadline, with full removal expected today.   
>   
> Tether chose not to seek MiCA approval, rejecting the regulation’s requirement to… [pic.twitter.com/UutwZIpdFx](https://t.co/UutwZIpdFx)
> 
> — BSCN (@BSCNews) [July 1, 2026](https://x.com/BSCNews/status/2072259165221712310?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## The Custody Signal and the Conversion Crunch

A day before the deadline, BNY (Bank of New York Mellon) confirmed it made USDC the first stablecoin on its Digital Asset Custody platform, letting institutional clients store, transfer, mint, and burn [USDC](https://coinlaw.io/usd-coin-statistics/) there. The timing reads as a signal, not a coincidence.

The compliance gap is not unique to Tether. Of the roughly **1,200** virtual-asset firms that held pre-MiCA national registrations across the EU, only around **210** converted to full CASP authorization, a conversion rate near **17%**. That frames Tether’s exit as the largest casualty of a bloc-wide bottleneck, not a targeted grudge.

[Tether](https://coinlaw.io/tether-statistics/) is not disappearing from Europe entirely. Partners building on its Hadron tokenization platform, **StablR** and **Oobit**, have launched their own MiCA-compliant euro and dollar stablecoins, giving Tether an indirect foothold even without a licensed USDT of its own.

Separately, a consortium of roughly three dozen European banks, including BNP Paribas and ING, is developing a bank-issued euro stablecoin called [Qivalis](https://coinlaw.io/qivalis-euro-stablecoin-37-bank-consortium/), a project independent of any of the incumbent dollar-stablecoin issuers. That effort adds to broader decentralized finance market showing euro-denominated liquidity still trailing dollar-pegged stablecoins by a wide margin.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

The custody move and the licensing numbers point to one throughline: regulators want stablecoin money traceable to an EU-domiciled balance sheet, and the 60% deposit rule forces issuers to act like euro-area banks.

USDT holders inside the EU face a practical problem, not an existential one: reduced access on CASP-licensed exchanges, with over-the-counter and non-EU venues still open. MiCA has effectively split Europe’s stablecoin market into a compliant tier gaining institutional custody partners like BNY and a non-compliant tier losing exchange shelf space one delisting at a time. This is regulatory and market reporting, not investment guidance.